Cat Articles

Cat Articles2022-10-29T01:34:42+00:00
2611, 2023

Common Diseases – Dental Disease

November 26th, 2023|Categories: Cat, Dog|

Periodontal disease, or 'dental' disease, is a very common problem we deal with in Veterinary practice. If left untreated, it can lead to debilitating pain or discomfort, and even go so far as to impact the health of internal organs such as the heart, liver and kidneys. However, in

511, 2023

Viruses & Vaccines

November 5th, 2023|Categories: Cat|

Vaccinations play a vital role in the overall health of our pets. It is important to keep them up to date, as the diseases they protect them from can be life-threatening, or cause long-term, chronic problems. Thanks to modern medicine, these viruses are much less common nowadays. Developing a vaccine

2001, 2023

Parasite Prevention – Heartworm

January 20th, 2023|Categories: Cat, Dog|

The Silent Killer Heartworm is one of the lesser-known, yet more deadly parasites that can infect our pets, coined ‘the silent killer’ as clinical signs may not develop for months or even years. This usually occurs when there is a large heartworm burden – and for some animals,

801, 2023

Fleas

January 8th, 2023|Categories: Cat, Dog|

Fleas are classified as ‘ecto parasites’ – meaning they live on the outside of a host, unlike the heartworm and intestinal worms as previously discussed. Similarly to their tick cousins, they can also be carriers for diseases such as flea allergy dermatitis, tapeworm, cat scratch fever and anaemia. Diagnosis

612, 2022

Parasite Prevention – Intestinal Worms

December 6th, 2022|Categories: Cat, Dog|

Hookworm, roundworm, whipworm and tapeworm are the 4 most common intestinal worms that can infect your pets. See Figure 1 for a visual representation. This family of parasites are usually missed as they don't pose as great of a risk compared to ticks and heartworm. However, it is important nonetheless

2910, 2022

Tick Paralysis & Treatment

October 29th, 2022|Categories: Cat, Dog|

There are three main types of ticks that infect domestic animals in Australia – paralysis ticks, bush ticks and brown dog ticks. The most harmful is Ixodes holocyclus – the paralysis tick. Famously known for its debilitating toxin that can be fatal to any of our dogs and cats

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